The chaos in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo is deepening, even as the international community is having another go at bringing peace to one of the
most unstable places in the world. Yesterday, a notorious Hutu militia
seized control
of a vital border town; earlier in the week, one group perpetrated a brutal pogrom-style attack on Kinyarwanda-speaking civilians. And the M23, perhaps the
strongest armed group in a region where miiltias are constantly splitting and multiplying, has itself started to violently fracture. A peace deal has been
signed, but the U.N. is considering a radical solution to a long and deadly conflict: a counter-insurgency-style operation waged under the
World Body's auspices.

Last week saw a potential breakthrough in the situation, wheneleven heads of state signed a " framework agreement" in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, committing themselves to
reforming a simultaneously weak and predatory Congolese state and creating a united front for tackling the region's issues. The treaty makes no mention of the M23, the rebel group consisting of former members of an
anti-government insurgency that were integrated into the Congolese military under a brittle 2009 peace agreement -- before defecting and resuming the
insurgency last May. It reads more like a vague declaration of principles than a serious peace agreement.

Jason Stearns, an author, former U.N. investigator and close observer of the region's Byzantine politics, has written that the framework could mark the beginning of a broader, consensus-based effort
at solving the country's myriad problems. But those problems include the near-total non-existence of functioning Congolese institutions, the proliferation
and splintering of dozens of armed groups, long-simmering disputes over land rights and citizenship, and interference from neighboring countries -- only
some of which are solvable at the negotiating table alone. With the framework, governments and regional organizations from across Africa, including the
powerful Southern African Development Community, kicked off a broad-based effort to end a conflict that's raged since the mid-90s, and killed between 1 and
5.4 million people. Stearns rightly argues that it's too early to judge what this commitment will actually be worth.

"It will take a lot of political clout to make the Framework Agreement more than just words," Stearns wrote in an email.

Laura Seay of Morehouse College says there is plenty of cause of skepticism. The declaration includes no benchmarks for success. There are no provisions
for funding the framework's potentially-expensive goal of rehabilitating the DRC's security sector.

"The reason that everybody signed it is that it's so lacking specifics that it's going to be very difficult to implement its provisions," says Seay.

More fundamentally, the M23 isn't a party to the framework, even if both of its alleged state sponsors (Uganda and Rwanda) are. Their participation might
not have even mattered -- as if in deliberate rebuke to a peace process that is barely a few days old, M23 was in the course of violently fracturing just as
the Addis Ababa meeting was underway. Earlier this week, eight militia members will killed during violent clashes between supporters of M23
leader Bosco Ntaganda, and his rival,
Sultani Makenga
. Even if M23 could maintain its organizational integrity, the leading diplomatic attempt at dealing with the group's grievances have gone nowhere.

"They have failed," Seay says of the ongoing negotiations between the DRC government and M23 in Kampala, a process sponsored by a coalition of central
African states. "M23 wants to go back to being able to exist as an autonomous unit within the Congolese army. And [DRC president Joseph] Kabila is not
willing to allow that state of affairs to continue. It's kind of an intractable argument. There is no way forward in that kind of situation except for one
side to eliminate the other."

The multiplication of armed groups -- and schisms within the one militia capable of putting the Congo crisis back in international headlines -- makes peace
an even more distant proposition.

But the framework agreement could prefigure another, even more important development in the international community's relationship to the Eastern DRC.
Right now, the U.N. is considering sweeping changes to the mandate of MONUSCO, the U.N.'s
peacekeeping mission in the eastern DRC and the largest U.N. peacekeeping force on earth. Last week's agreement could help clear the way for a risky
humanitarian military intervention -- but one whose success would have broad ramifications.

The international community seems ready to give a special cadre within the U.N.'s most troubled peacekeeping mission -- widely criticized for its failure to
protect the crucial North Kivu city of Goma, or even the displaced persons camps surrounding the city, during an M23 offensive in
November - the ability to go on the offensive against armed groups in the Eastern DRC. In a best-case scenario, both the mission and the region would
experience a precedent-setting turnaround, as 2,500-3,000 special forces from South Africa, Mozambique, Tanzania and other African states help secure areas
where civilians have been cyclically displaced for past two decades. But the "intervention force" could also move the U.N., and Eastern Congo, into
dangerous uncharted territory.

***

It is highly likely that MONUSCO's mandate will be reassessed in the coming weeks. One source from the U.N. mission of a country on the U.N. Security
Council said Council members are in the "early stages of discussion" about charting an "evolution to the mandate" of the peacekeeping mission. A U.S.
official confirmed that his country's U.N. mission is supportive of the concept of an intervention force. Stearns says such a force would likely operate
under "beefed-up rules of engagement...so that they can take offensive action against groups like the M23 and FDLR [an Eastern DRC-based Hutu ethnic militia
descended from the groups responsible for the 1994 Rwandan genocide]." Neither U.N.-based source would go into specifics about potential changes to the
rules of engagement. Both emphasized that discussions are at a very early stage. But this week, the Secretary General submitted a
strategic review to the Security Council related to the peacekeeping effort. MONUSCO's mandate expires in late June, and negotiations surrounding mission
extensions usually take about a month. Things could move quickly.

The "intervention force" would be markedly different from the current peacekeeping detachment. "They would be able to fire first instead of wait to be
fired on," says Michelle Brown, Refugees International's representative at the U.N. "And that is contrary
to most other peacekeeping mandates." Something like this has already been tried: in 2003 the E.U. led a joint Ugandan-French operation in the DRC's Ituri province. French troops stayed for several
months after the initial mission, and the operation is still viewed as a qualified success.

But according to Scott Sheeran, a professor of international affairs and director of the Peacekeeping Law Reform Project at the University of Essex, this would be the first time since the U.N.'s
botched intervention in Somalia in the early 1990s that members of a peacekeeping mission would have such broad rules of engagement. Blue Helmets would be
tasked with hunting down armed groups and clearing areas for safe civilian habitation, which is not what they usually do.

"What you often get for rules of engagement for peacekeepers is that they can only effectively use force against people with hostile intent or who commit
hostile acts," Sheeran says. "What they don't normally have is the concept of a hostile force -- that just simply because you're a member of that force,
we're going to go after you."

Seay thinks that an intervention force could have an immediate impact, and speculates that M23 would be "unlikely to be able to fight off a well-funded,
well-equipped contingent of, say, South African special forces." And although Stearns doubts the force will be used for "risky counterinsurgency
operations," he adds that "it will deploy with the political backing of some of the biggest powers in the region, especially Tanzania and South Africa. I
doubt they would be happy to see the M23 or the FDLR put them to shame."

There could also be deeply negative consequences even before the first shots are fired.

Sheeran notes that it will be difficult for the intervention force to seem as if it -- and, by extension, the U.N. -- isn't taking sides in a
dizzyingly-complex situation. The force would be throwing even more support behind the Congolese FARDC, a military which is itself responsible for
widespread abuses (things have changed dramatically since then, but according to a 2010 U.S. State Department report, the DRC's security apparatus was responsible for "the
majority of the country's human rights abuses.")

"They're going after one set of bad guys," says Sheeran, "but doing nothing against the other set of bad guys, which are the national military forces."

Assumedly, the intervention force, which will lack the manpower to hold territory, would be tasked with clearing militant-held areas that the FARDC could
later secure. The U.N. has tried a similar tactic before, and the result wasn't a lasting peace in the Eastern DRC, but troubling questions about the
conduct and even the purpose of U.N. peacekeeping.

"The U.N. was actually tied to human rights violations because of their support for the FARDC," says Brown, who said that the "huge humanitarian fallout"
of the operation included widespread displacement and worsened access for food and medical relief. The World Body was
compelled to draft a new due-diligence policy in the operation's aftermath
, with the aim of ensuring that U.N. peacekeepers wouldn't provide cover for other actors' human rights violations.

Concerns over the FARDC discipline and professionalism are just as strong now, and the intervention force could be a classic example of rushing a military
solution when a political remedy -- in this case, meaningful reform of the Congolese military, and, by extension, the Congolese state -- isn't in place.

Even if the FARDC does behave itself, it's possible that clearing rebel areas without the backing of a military competent to hold them will create a
sequence of localized power vacuums, feeding new cycles of civilian displacement. It's possible the intervention force will turn every U.N. peacekeeper
into a target of armed groups--after all, there will still be 17,000 soldiers tasked with more traditional peacekeeping duties, like protecting the nearly
one million people who have fled their homes since the M23 crisis began in April of 2012. And it's possible the U.N. force will lose some of its human
intelligence capabilities, as populations supportive of M23, the FDLR and the region's other militias go from tolerating the U.N.'s military presence to
openly despising it.

***

Still, the authorization of an intervention force would capitalize on the perhaps-fleeting moment of censuses that the framework agreement represents. It's
also an injection of new thinking into a place where nearly everything -- U.N. peacekeepers, the integration of former insurgents into the government, repeated foreign invasions -- has already been tried.

"After years of trying policies that have not worked, they have finally decided that civilian protection can and should be accomplished through U.N.
forces.," Seay says in characterizing the conflict's various stakeholders. "It's the best idea anyone has had for a security sector issue in the Congo in a
very long time. It's hard to overstate how bad previous efforts have been."

New thinking on the conflict is especially urgent now. In the past two days, the FDLR has seized Rushuru, an important border
city in North Kivu -- especially worrying because of the widespread perception that the militant Hutu supremacist group, which seeks to overthrow Rwandan
president Paul Kagame's government, receives support from Kinshasa. And M23 continues to spin out of any one individual's control. The breakup suggests
that Rwanda no longer has tight command-and-control over the organization, as a group of U.N. investigators determined in November of 2012. There's evidence that the
M23's ranks have shrunk in the months since the sack of Goma, further hinting that Rwanda is no longer as generous in providing manpower, and Rwanda has tightened its restrictions on a former anti-Congolese rebel leader
living under house arrest. Rwanda is a signatory to the framework agreement and has a seat on the U.N. Security Council; observers do not expect them to be
an impediment to the intervention force's authorization.

But Rwanda's sudden tendency towards good regional citizenship is far from a quick fix -- and if the FDLR gains strength, Kigali might rethink its decision
to pull back from the DRC. And M23 occupies but a single corner of a dauntingly vast conflict: One militia waged a deadly and ethnically-motivated attack on civilians on Thursday, and the Raia
Mutondoki, one of the most brutalarmed groups in the country, controls much of South Kivu.
Hundreds of thousands of people are internally displaced, and the once-stable M23-held areas could become unlivable as tensions within the group explode.
Despite the framework agreement, and despite two decades of chaos and violence, the situation in the Eastern Congo is somehow getting even worse. "This
kind of chronic insecurity has become the normal situation," says Sam Dixon, a Kinshasa-based policy advisor for Oxfam.
Chances are it's going to remain that way.

But with the intervention force, the significance of the DRC's still-dubious peace process could spread beyond one troubled stretch of Central Africa. It
could prove that the U.N. is capable of successfully waging war, challenging the widespread perception that Blue Helmets are doomed to be passive observers
of human suffering that they have neither the means nor the ability to relieve. And it could add a potent tool to the U.N.'s available means of dealing
with global unrest.

Or it could prove that the U.N. is capable of using force recklessly -- just like the member states that comprise it.

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Armin Rosen is a former writer and producer for The Atlantic's Global channel.